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Jun 2000
ISBN 0262071983
286 pp.
94 illus.
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The Hot Brain
Carl V. Gisolfi and Francisco Mora

"This book represents a significant contribution to the field, as the authors have crossed the lines between zoology, anthropology, physiology, psychology, and the study of evolution, to create a story about one of the fundamental requirements for sustaining life -- a constant body temperature."
-- Steven M. Frank, M.D., Associate Professor, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions

From the first unicellular life on Earth, living things have had the capacity to sense heat and cold and to avoid extreme temperatures. With the development of a bigger brain and a constant body temperature, mammals were able to change their habitats. The interplay between behavior, body temperature, and ambient temperature may have played a crucial role in human evolution. In this book Carl Gisolfi and Francisco Mora tell the evolutionary story of the brain and thermoregulation, with an emphasis on modern humans.

The book first traces the story of the brain throughout evolution and shows how the control of body temperature as a survival mechanism was achieved. It then goes on to discuss the mechanisms of our environmental independence, why a body temperature of 37¿ C (only five degrees from death) is essential for humans and how this narrow temperature range is defended. It describes how we cope with environmental extremes, the function of fevers, and why thermoregulation is best understood through a combination of physiological and cognitive approaches. It also addresses such questions as "Can we cool the brain?" and "Is the elevation in brain temperature (a hot brain) the reason we stop exercising?"

Table of Contents
 Preface
 Acknowledgments
1 In the Beginning
2 Evolution and the Control of Body Temperatures as a Mechanism for Survival
3 The Mechanics of Our Environmental Independence: Building Circuits and Chemicals in the Brain
4 More About the Brain and Temperature
5 What's So Important About a Body Temperature of 37°C?
6 From Siberia to Africa: Understanding the Extremes
7 The Burning Brain
8 Fever, Survival, and Death
9 Temperature and the Struggle for Life
10 The Brain Is the Body: A Unitary Perspective on Thermoregulation
 References
 Index
 
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